data("Boston")
str(Boston)
## 'data.frame': 506 obs. of 14 variables:
## $ crim : num 0.00632 0.02731 0.02729 0.03237 0.06905 ...
## $ zn : num 18 0 0 0 0 0 12.5 12.5 12.5 12.5 ...
## $ indus : num 2.31 7.07 7.07 2.18 2.18 2.18 7.87 7.87 7.87 7.87 ...
## $ chas : int 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ...
## $ nox : num 0.538 0.469 0.469 0.458 0.458 0.458 0.524 0.524 0.524 0.524 ...
## $ rm : num 6.58 6.42 7.18 7 7.15 ...
## $ age : num 65.2 78.9 61.1 45.8 54.2 58.7 66.6 96.1 100 85.9 ...
## $ dis : num 4.09 4.97 4.97 6.06 6.06 ...
## $ rad : int 1 2 2 3 3 3 5 5 5 5 ...
## $ tax : num 296 242 242 222 222 222 311 311 311 311 ...
## $ ptratio: num 15.3 17.8 17.8 18.7 18.7 18.7 15.2 15.2 15.2 15.2 ...
## $ black : num 397 397 393 395 397 ...
## $ lstat : num 4.98 9.14 4.03 2.94 5.33 ...
## $ medv : num 24 21.6 34.7 33.4 36.2 28.7 22.9 27.1 16.5 18.9 ...
dim(Boston)
## [1] 506 14
The Boston dataset contains 506 rows and 14 columns of information relevant to the housing values in the suburbs of Boston.
#We show a summary of the dataset
summary(Boston)
## crim zn indus chas
## Min. : 0.00632 Min. : 0.00 Min. : 0.46 Min. :0.00000
## 1st Qu.: 0.08204 1st Qu.: 0.00 1st Qu.: 5.19 1st Qu.:0.00000
## Median : 0.25651 Median : 0.00 Median : 9.69 Median :0.00000
## Mean : 3.61352 Mean : 11.36 Mean :11.14 Mean :0.06917
## 3rd Qu.: 3.67708 3rd Qu.: 12.50 3rd Qu.:18.10 3rd Qu.:0.00000
## Max. :88.97620 Max. :100.00 Max. :27.74 Max. :1.00000
## nox rm age dis
## Min. :0.3850 Min. :3.561 Min. : 2.90 Min. : 1.130
## 1st Qu.:0.4490 1st Qu.:5.886 1st Qu.: 45.02 1st Qu.: 2.100
## Median :0.5380 Median :6.208 Median : 77.50 Median : 3.207
## Mean :0.5547 Mean :6.285 Mean : 68.57 Mean : 3.795
## 3rd Qu.:0.6240 3rd Qu.:6.623 3rd Qu.: 94.08 3rd Qu.: 5.188
## Max. :0.8710 Max. :8.780 Max. :100.00 Max. :12.127
## rad tax ptratio black
## Min. : 1.000 Min. :187.0 Min. :12.60 Min. : 0.32
## 1st Qu.: 4.000 1st Qu.:279.0 1st Qu.:17.40 1st Qu.:375.38
## Median : 5.000 Median :330.0 Median :19.05 Median :391.44
## Mean : 9.549 Mean :408.2 Mean :18.46 Mean :356.67
## 3rd Qu.:24.000 3rd Qu.:666.0 3rd Qu.:20.20 3rd Qu.:396.23
## Max. :24.000 Max. :711.0 Max. :22.00 Max. :396.90
## lstat medv
## Min. : 1.73 Min. : 5.00
## 1st Qu.: 6.95 1st Qu.:17.02
## Median :11.36 Median :21.20
## Mean :12.65 Mean :22.53
## 3rd Qu.:16.95 3rd Qu.:25.00
## Max. :37.97 Max. :50.00
#We create a correlation matrix and store it
cor_matrix<-cor(Boston)
cor_matrix %>% round(digits = 2)
## crim zn indus chas nox rm age dis rad tax ptratio
## crim 1.00 -0.20 0.41 -0.06 0.42 -0.22 0.35 -0.38 0.63 0.58 0.29
## zn -0.20 1.00 -0.53 -0.04 -0.52 0.31 -0.57 0.66 -0.31 -0.31 -0.39
## indus 0.41 -0.53 1.00 0.06 0.76 -0.39 0.64 -0.71 0.60 0.72 0.38
## chas -0.06 -0.04 0.06 1.00 0.09 0.09 0.09 -0.10 -0.01 -0.04 -0.12
## nox 0.42 -0.52 0.76 0.09 1.00 -0.30 0.73 -0.77 0.61 0.67 0.19
## rm -0.22 0.31 -0.39 0.09 -0.30 1.00 -0.24 0.21 -0.21 -0.29 -0.36
## age 0.35 -0.57 0.64 0.09 0.73 -0.24 1.00 -0.75 0.46 0.51 0.26
## dis -0.38 0.66 -0.71 -0.10 -0.77 0.21 -0.75 1.00 -0.49 -0.53 -0.23
## rad 0.63 -0.31 0.60 -0.01 0.61 -0.21 0.46 -0.49 1.00 0.91 0.46
## tax 0.58 -0.31 0.72 -0.04 0.67 -0.29 0.51 -0.53 0.91 1.00 0.46
## ptratio 0.29 -0.39 0.38 -0.12 0.19 -0.36 0.26 -0.23 0.46 0.46 1.00
## black -0.39 0.18 -0.36 0.05 -0.38 0.13 -0.27 0.29 -0.44 -0.44 -0.18
## lstat 0.46 -0.41 0.60 -0.05 0.59 -0.61 0.60 -0.50 0.49 0.54 0.37
## medv -0.39 0.36 -0.48 0.18 -0.43 0.70 -0.38 0.25 -0.38 -0.47 -0.51
## black lstat medv
## crim -0.39 0.46 -0.39
## zn 0.18 -0.41 0.36
## indus -0.36 0.60 -0.48
## chas 0.05 -0.05 0.18
## nox -0.38 0.59 -0.43
## rm 0.13 -0.61 0.70
## age -0.27 0.60 -0.38
## dis 0.29 -0.50 0.25
## rad -0.44 0.49 -0.38
## tax -0.44 0.54 -0.47
## ptratio -0.18 0.37 -0.51
## black 1.00 -0.37 0.33
## lstat -0.37 1.00 -0.74
## medv 0.33 -0.74 1.00
#We create a correlation plot
corrplot(cor_matrix, method="circle", type = "upper", cl.pos = "b", tl.pos = "d", tl.cex = 0.6)
#We create a distribution plot
Boston %>% gather() %>% ggplot(aes(value)) + facet_wrap(~ key, scales = "free") + geom_density(colour="red")
We can easily observe thanks to the correlation plot the different interactions between the elements of the dataset. We also see in distribution graphics how the different variables do not represent a normal distribution.
#We center and standarized the variables
boston_scaled <- scale(Boston)
#We show a summary of the scaled variables
summary(boston_scaled)
## crim zn indus chas
## Min. :-0.419367 Min. :-0.48724 Min. :-1.5563 Min. :-0.2723
## 1st Qu.:-0.410563 1st Qu.:-0.48724 1st Qu.:-0.8668 1st Qu.:-0.2723
## Median :-0.390280 Median :-0.48724 Median :-0.2109 Median :-0.2723
## Mean : 0.000000 Mean : 0.00000 Mean : 0.0000 Mean : 0.0000
## 3rd Qu.: 0.007389 3rd Qu.: 0.04872 3rd Qu.: 1.0150 3rd Qu.:-0.2723
## Max. : 9.924110 Max. : 3.80047 Max. : 2.4202 Max. : 3.6648
## nox rm age dis
## Min. :-1.4644 Min. :-3.8764 Min. :-2.3331 Min. :-1.2658
## 1st Qu.:-0.9121 1st Qu.:-0.5681 1st Qu.:-0.8366 1st Qu.:-0.8049
## Median :-0.1441 Median :-0.1084 Median : 0.3171 Median :-0.2790
## Mean : 0.0000 Mean : 0.0000 Mean : 0.0000 Mean : 0.0000
## 3rd Qu.: 0.5981 3rd Qu.: 0.4823 3rd Qu.: 0.9059 3rd Qu.: 0.6617
## Max. : 2.7296 Max. : 3.5515 Max. : 1.1164 Max. : 3.9566
## rad tax ptratio black
## Min. :-0.9819 Min. :-1.3127 Min. :-2.7047 Min. :-3.9033
## 1st Qu.:-0.6373 1st Qu.:-0.7668 1st Qu.:-0.4876 1st Qu.: 0.2049
## Median :-0.5225 Median :-0.4642 Median : 0.2746 Median : 0.3808
## Mean : 0.0000 Mean : 0.0000 Mean : 0.0000 Mean : 0.0000
## 3rd Qu.: 1.6596 3rd Qu.: 1.5294 3rd Qu.: 0.8058 3rd Qu.: 0.4332
## Max. : 1.6596 Max. : 1.7964 Max. : 1.6372 Max. : 0.4406
## lstat medv
## Min. :-1.5296 Min. :-1.9063
## 1st Qu.:-0.7986 1st Qu.:-0.5989
## Median :-0.1811 Median :-0.1449
## Mean : 0.0000 Mean : 0.0000
## 3rd Qu.: 0.6024 3rd Qu.: 0.2683
## Max. : 3.5453 Max. : 2.9865
# We show the class of the boston_scaled object
class(boston_scaled)
## [1] "matrix"
#We change the object to data frame to work later with it
boston_scaled <- as.data.frame(boston_scaled)
bins <- quantile(boston_scaled$crim)
#We create a categorical variable of the crime rate in the Boston dataset (from the scaled crime rate).
crime <- cut(boston_scaled$crim, breaks = bins, include.lowest = TRUE, label = c("low","med_low","med_high","high"))
#We remove the old crime rate variable from the dataset
boston_scaled <- dplyr::select(boston_scaled, -crim)
boston_scaled <- data.frame(boston_scaled, crime)
#We divide the dataset to train and test sets, so that 80% of the data belongs to the train set.
n <- nrow(boston_scaled)
#We choose randomly 80% of the rows
ind <- sample(n, size = n * 0.8)
#We create train set
train <- boston_scaled[ind,]
#We create test set
test <- boston_scaled[-ind,]
#We use the categorical crime rate as the target variable and all the other variables in the dataset as predictor variables
lda.fit <- lda(crime ~ ., data = train)
# the function for lda biplot arrows
lda.arrows <- function(x, myscale = 1, arrow_heads = 0.1, color = "red", tex = 0.75, choices = c(1,2)){
heads <- coef(x)
arrows(x0 = 0, y0 = 0,
x1 = myscale * heads[,choices[1]],
y1 = myscale * heads[,choices[2]], col=color, length = arrow_heads)
text(myscale * heads[,choices], labels = row.names(heads),
cex = tex, col=color, pos=3)
}
# target classes as numeric
classes <- as.numeric(train$crime)
# We draw the plot with the lda results
plot(lda.fit, dimen = 2, col = classes, pch = classes)
lda.arrows(lda.fit, myscale = 1)
#We save the correct classes from test data
correct_classes <- test$crime
#We remove the crime variable from test data
test <- dplyr::select(test, -crime)
#We predict classes with test data
lda.pred <- predict(lda.fit, newdata = test)
#We cross tabulate the results
table(correct = correct_classes, predicted = lda.pred$class)
## predicted
## correct low med_low med_high high
## low 11 11 2 0
## med_low 3 15 4 0
## med_high 1 6 20 0
## high 0 0 0 29
As we can observe from the cross tabulation, our model predicts best the category of high. Second, the category of low is also high enough. Finally, the med_low and med_high categories have lower accuracy of predictions, even though the majority is still correct.
#We load the data and standarize it
data(Boston)
boston_scaled <- scale(Boston)
#We calculate the distances with the Eucidean distance
dist(boston_scaled)
#We run k-means algorithm on the dataset.
km <-kmeans(boston_scaled, centers = 2)
#We visualize the clusters
pairs(boston_scaled, col = km$cluster)
From the options we can choose, 2 centers seem to be the best representation of the results, as we can see clearly differentiated clusters with such number. With more centers, the clusters are not separated properly and they tend to occupy the same space of our plots.
library(plotly)
##
## Attaching package: 'plotly'
## The following object is masked from 'package:ggplot2':
##
## last_plot
## The following object is masked from 'package:MASS':
##
## select
## The following object is masked from 'package:stats':
##
## filter
## The following object is masked from 'package:graphics':
##
## layout
model_predictors <- dplyr::select(train, -crime)
# check the dimensions
dim(model_predictors)
## [1] 404 13
dim(lda.fit$scaling)
## [1] 13 3
# matrix multiplication
matrix_product <- as.matrix(model_predictors) %*% lda.fit$scaling
matrix_product <- as.data.frame(matrix_product)
plot_ly(x = matrix_product$LD1, y = matrix_product$LD2, z = matrix_product$LD3, type= 'scatter3d', mode='markers', color = classes)